GREENWOOD — How far would you be willing to go to win a new car? Four Hoosiers put their eardrums through the wringer in a radio station contest 25 years ago this month.
WZPL-FM kicked off its second Live In It To Win contest at the Greenwood Park Mall on March 22, 1997.
Contestants had to sit inside a new Plymouth Breeze and listen to nothing but the Macarena for two weeks straight.
Contestants were allowed to take a five-minute break every three hours, but they weren’t allowed to change their clothes.
Each participant raised money for breast cancer research and if more than one person made it to the end of the two-week competition, the person with the most money raised would win the car.
Barry Inskeep, Shawn Jones, Adam Larkin and Debra Waldrup were all up to the challenge.
“I'm getting married in June so I'm going to concentrate on that,” Adam Larkin told WRTV.
In a follow up interview a few days later, Larkin told WRTV, “The Macarena is starting to get on my nerves a little bit. It’s blaring in the ear a little bit. It’s hard to sleep, especially at nighttime. The mall’s so quiet it’s loud.”
Debra Waldrup was the first and only contestant to be eliminated from the competition during its two-week run. Waldrup returned late from a break.
After two weeks in the car, Jones, Inskeep and Larkin had listened to the Macarena more than 5,000 times.
The three men raised nearly $10,000. Shawn Jones raised the most money totaling more than $4,000 which meant he was the lucky winner of the Plymouth Breeze.
Jones told WRTV, “My wife's at home she had to work, but I love you, we did it honey, we did it!"
-
'It means that I can go to work': Local single mom gets free car
A single mom who’s been without a car for months got a new set of wheels Wednesday, and it didn't cost her a dime thanks to an auto-repair company with local ties.South Madison Fire Territory expansion canceled due to new property tax law
Eight local governing bodies had previously agreed to expand the South Madison Fire Protection Territory, but now, that plan has to be scrapped.Neighbors seek changes to the intersection of 16th and Delaware Street
Neighbors and community leaders on Indy’s Old North Side are calling for additional safety measures for what they say has long been a dangerous intersection.AI data processing center could rise in Hancock County
Cloud computer technology, including artificial intelligence, needs data centers to function. A developer hopes to convert more than 700 acres of Hancock County farmland into an AI data campus.